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Alias Smith and Jones Trivia and Facts

Buy Alias Smith and Jones First Season on DVD

Alias Smith and Jones is a Western television series on ABC from 1971 to 1973. It starred Pete Duel as Hannibal Heyes and Ben Murphy as Kid Curry, a pair of Western outlaws trying to reform.

When Duel died suddenly on December 31, 1971 (reportedly of a self-inflicted gunshot), an attempt was made to continue the series with another actor, Roger Davis, in the role of Heyes. The series continued for another seventeen episodes, but never regained its popularity after the loss of Duel. Davis first voiced the intro theme, which explained the storyline. When he was hired to play Heyes/Smith, Ralph Story assumed the intro narration. In the final season the intro referred to Heyes and Curry as "Kansas cousins". Two episodes that season also made reference to them as cousins.

Alias Smith and Jones Intro

The Beginning

Alias Smith and Jones began with a made-for-TV movie of the previous year called The Young Country, about con artists in the Old West. It was produced, written and directed by Roy Huggins, who served as executive producer of AS&J and, under the pseudonym of John Thomas James, at least shared the writing credit on most episodes. Roger Davis starred as Stephen Foster Moody, and Pete Duel had the secondary but significant role of Honest John Smith, while Joan Hackett played a character called Clementine Hale, the same name as a part played on two AS&J episodes by Sally Field. This pilot was rejected, but Huggins was given a second chance and, joined by Glen A. Larson, developed Alias Smith and Jones. Both The Young Country and the series pilot movie originally aired as ABC Movie of the Week entries.

Alias Smith and Jones was made in the same spirit as many other American TV series, from Huggins' own The Fugitive to Renegade, about men on the run crisscrossing America and getting involved in the personal lives of the people they meet. One major difference was that Hannibal Heyes and Kid Curry were guilty of the crimes that they were accused of committing, but were trying to turn over a new leaf.

The series was inspired by the success of the 1969 film Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford. There were a number of connecting themes: one of the heroes was named Kid Curry which was also the nickname of Harvey Logan, an associate of the real Butch Cassidy (unlike the TV version however, the real Kid Curry was a cold-blooded killer).

The series also featured a group of outlaws called the Devil's Hole Gang which was based on the Hole in the Wall Gang from where Cassidy recruited most of his outlaws.

However, in order to give them an element of sympathy, Heyes and Curry were presented as men who avoided bloodshed (though Curry did once kill in self-defense) and trying to reform.

Premise

Operating primarily in Wyoming Territory, Hannibal Heyes and Kid Curry are the two most successful outlaws in the history of the west. However, the west is starting to catch up with the modern world: safes are becoming harder to crack, trains more difficult to stop, and posses more skilled at tracking them down.

Heyes, the leader of the Devil's Hole Gang, falls out with the other members and he and Curry decide to "get out of this business". Since they have never killed anyone, they qualify for pardons. Through an old acquaintance, Sheriff Lom Trevors (James Drury in the pilot, variably by Mike Road and John Russell in the series, due to the sporadic nature of the character's appearances), they manage to contact the territorial governor. He agrees to grant them amnesty, but cannot do so openly without angering the public. He therefore makes a deal with them: if they can stay out of trouble for a considerable but unspecified period of time ("until the governor feels we deserve it") and not tell anyone about their arrangement, they will be cleared of all charges. Until then, they will still be wanted ("That's a good deal?").

However, the straight and narrow path is not easily traveled. Heyes and Curry (now calling themselves Joshua Smith and Thaddeus Jones) often find themselves tangling with lawmen, bounty hunters and operatives of the Bannerman Detective Agency (a satire of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency), not to mention other outlaws. To get out of these sticky situations, they must rely on Heyes' silver tongue, Curry's fast draw, and occasionally a little help from their friends from both sides of the law.

Characters

Heyes was deemed "cunning", and Curry was "gunning". Heyes/Smith was considered the brains of the duo, and a card shark. Curry/Jones was the master gun hand, and the brawn. Usually, Heyes figured out ways to make money and save the twosome from precarious situations.

Recurring characters include:

* Kyle Murtry (Dennis Fimple) and Wheat Carlson (Earl Holliman), members of the Devil's Hole Gang, formerly led by Heyes and Curry;

* Harry Briscoe (J.D. Cannon), a Bannerman detective who occasionally finds himself on the wrong side of the law;

* Patrick "Big Mac" McCreedy (Burl Ives) and Señor Armendariz (Cesar Romero), two ranchers on opposite sides of the US-Mexico border/Rio Grande waging a feud over a valuable bust which represents land that had been owned by Armendariz until the river temporarily switched course, moving the border with it, allowing MacCreedy to sell the land. Heyes and Curry get stuck in the middle;

* Clementine "Clem" Hale (Sally Field), an old friend who has no problem with blackmailing the reformed outlaws when necessary. Field had appeared in only one episode when Duel died, and she declined to return to the program. Several scripts intended for her were rewritten to feature Georgette "George" Sinclair, who was played by Michele Lee. In the third season, Field did appear as Clem one last time;

* Soapy Saunders (Sam Jaffe) and Silky O'Sullivan (Walter Brennan), both retired confidence men that the boys call on when in need of a large sum of cash and a good con to get them out of trouble.

Memorable quotes

* Narrator: " Hannibal Heyes and Kid Curry: the two most successful outlaws in the history of the West. And in all the trains and banks they robbed they never shot anyone. This made our two latter-day Robin Hoods very popular with everyone but the railroads and the banks" (when Davis advanced to a leading role and the narration was rerecorded by another actor, "Robin Hoods" became "Kansas cousins").
* Narrator (from the pilot): "Into the west came many men. Some were good men and some were bad men. Some were good men that had some bad in them, and some were bad men that had some good in them. This is the story of two pretty good bad men."
* Kid Curry (from the main opening sequence in every episode): "There's one thing we got to get Heyes"; Heyes: "What's that ?"; Kid Curry: "Outta this business!"
* Wheat Carlson: "If it don't involve dynamite, it ain't gonna work."
* Hannibal Heyes: "You know ever since you became a dancer you've been some prima donna!"
* Kyle Murtry: "That's the dirtiest trick I've ever heard of... but I like it."
* Harry Briscoe: "Remember! A Bannerman man never forgets!"
* Kid Curry: "I'd say 'tender' but then you'd feel called upon to say something clever and I'd have to kill ya."
* Sister Julia: "By any chance are you two gentlemen Catholics?"
Kid Curry: "No, uh, Kansans, ma'am."
* Hannibal Heyes: "Alright? I'm better'n alright. I'm brilliant."

This is a list of episodes of the western comedy TV series Alias Smith and Jones.
Alias Smith and Jones originally aired in the United States on ABC. The series consisted of forty-eight 60 minute episodes and two 90 minute episodes. The first thirty-three episodes starred Pete Duel as Hannibal Heyes and Ben Murphy as Kid Curry. During the last seventeen episodes, Roger Davis played Hannibal Heyes.

Season 1 (1971)

# Title Original airdate
1.1 “Pilot” January 5, 1971
1.2 “The McCreedy Bust” January 21, 1971
1.3 “Exit from Wickenburg” January 28, 1971
1.4 “Wrong Train to Brimstone” February 4, 1971
1.5 “The Girl in Boxcar #3” February 11, 1971
1.6 “The Great Shell Game” February 18, 1971
1.7 “Return to Devil’s Hole” February 25, 1971
1.8 “A Fistful of Diamonds” March 4, 1971
1.9 “Stagecoach 7” March 11, 1971
1.10 “The Man Who Murdered Himself” March 18, 1971
1.11 “The Root of It All” March 25, 1971
1.12 “The 5th Victim” April 1, 1971
1.13 “Journey from San Juan” April 8, 1971
1.14 “Never Trust an Honest Man” April 15, 1971
1.15 “The Legacy of Charlie O’Rourke” April 22, 1971

 Season 2 (1971 - 1972)

# Title Original airdate
2.1 “The Day They Hanged Kid Curry” September 16, 1971
2.2 “How to Rob a Bank in One Hard Lesson” September 23, 1971
2.3 “Jailbreak at Junction City” September 30, 1971
2.4 “Smiler with a Gun” with Barbara Stuart October 7, 1971
2.5 “The Posse That Wouldn’t Quit” October 14, 1971
2.6 “Something to Get Hung About” October 21, 1971
2.7 “Six Strangers at Apache Springs” October 28, 1971
2.8 “Night of the Red Dog” November 4, 1971
2.9 “The Reformation of Harry Briscoe” November 11, 1971
2.10 “Dreadful Sorry, Clementine” November 18, 1971
2.11 “Shootout at Diablo Station” December 2, 1971
2.12 “The Bounty Hunter” December 9, 1971
2.13 “Everything Else You Can Steal” December 16, 1971
2.14 “Miracle at Santa Marta” December 30, 1971
2.15 “21 Days to Tenstrike” January 6, 1972
2.16 “The McCreedy Bust: Going, Going, Gone” January 15, 1972
2.17 “The Man Who Broke the Bank at Red Gap” January 20, 1972
2.18 “The Men That Corrupted Hadleyburg” January 27, 1972
2.19 “The Biggest Game in the West” February 3, 1972
2.20 “Which Way to the OK Corral?” February 10, 1972
2.21 “Don’t Get Mad, Get Even” with Gregg Palmer February 17, 1972
2.22 “What’s in it for Mia?” February 24, 1972
2.22 “Bad Night in Big Butte” February 2, 1972

 

 Season 3 (1972 - 1973)

# Title Original airdate
3.1 “The Long Chase” September 16, 1972
3.2 “High Lonesome Country” September 23, 1972
3.3 “The McCreedy Feud” September 30, 1972
3.4 “The Clementine Ingredient” October 7, 1972
3.5 “Bushwhack!” October 21, 1972
3.6 “What Happened at the XST?” October 28, 1972
3.7 “The Ten Days That Shook Kid Curry” November 4, 1972
3.8 “The Day the Amnesty Came Through” November 25, 1972
3.9 “The Strange Fate of Conrad Meyer Zulick” December 2, 1972
3.10 “McGuffin” December 9, 1972
3.11 “Witness to a Lynching” December 16, 1972
3.12 “Only Three to a Bed” January 13, 1973

 

Ben Murphy Interview on Smith and Jones